*356Opinion of the Court by
Chief Justice O’Rear—Reversing.
This suit was brought as a common-law action by appellee, the mother of her infant children, against their statutory guardian to recover $75 a year for-their board and clothing and her services in caring for them. It is alleged that appellee is a widow of very limited means, with barely enough to sustain her7 self; that the infants are of tender years, incapable of laboring for their support, and too young to be bound as apprentices; that they have estates, though the income therefrom is insufficient to educate and support them. She prayed for a judgment against the guardian for the sum alleged to be reasonable pay for their clothing, nurture, and education for several years previous, to be satisfied out of the estate in the hands of the guardian. A general demurrer to the petition was overruled. The guardian declining to plead, a judgment for the sum sued for was rendered by default. The guardian appeals
The statute under which the action is said to have been brought is section 2034, Ky. Stats., 1903, as follows: “No disbursements shall be allowed the guardian for the maintenance and education of the ward beyond the income of the estate, except in the following cases, unless authorized by the deed or will under which the estate is derived. (1) When the ward is of such tender years or infirm health that he can not be bound out as an apprentice, or no suitable person will take him as such. (2) When it is best for the ward that the principal of his personal estate shall be applied for his board and tuition, and the court, upon settlement of the accounts, shall deem such application *357to have been judicious and properly made. But neither the ward nor his real estate shall be liable for any such disbursement. ’ ’ Section 2039, Ky. Stats., 1903, provides: “The several courts of chancery shall have power to hear and determine all matters between guardian and ward, require settlements of guardianship accounts, remove a guardian for neglect or breach of trust, control the custody and tuition of the ward and the management and preservation of his estate, and direct the sale of any of his real estate, if necessary to the proper maintenance and education of the ward, or for the payment of his debts. ’ ’ Sections 2032, 2033, Ky. Stats., 1903, read: “A guardian shall have the custody of his ward, and the possession, care, and management of the ward’s estate, real and personal, and out of the estate shall provide for the necessary and proper maintenance and education of the ward.” “The father of the minor if living, or if dead, the mother, if suited to the trust shall be allowed by the court to have the custody, control and education of the ward. It is thus shown that the supreme care of the law is the ward’s welfare — first, his necessary maintenance ; then, his proper education; then, the preservation and proper application of his estate. "While it is recognized that the parent or guardian might properly look after the minor’s education, and that the guardian is charged, so far as the estate is sufficient, with his maintenance, the final power of supervision and control in all these matters is left with the court of chancery. The sections quoted should be read to gether. The interests of the infant ward will not be left entirely to his parent or guardian or to their joint action. At last it must meet the approval either of the probate court where the guardianes accounts are to be settled, or of the court of chancery, which may *358Lave jurisdiction of the matter. If the guardian and parent could not out of court agree as between themselves as to the application of the ward’s estate contrary to the final and supervisory judgment of the proper court before which the accounts may come for settlement, they could not bind it by proceedings in an action at law, where one alleges a state of facts to exist upon which an implied or express assumpsit is based against tire ward’s estate, and the other by confession admits his ward’s estate to be liable, whereby it may be sequestered by execution. Nor should the guardian, in' case of an honest doubt as to his duty and the ability of the ward’s estate to properly maintain and educate the minor, be subjected to the hazard of having his accounts disallowed upon the final settlement. The guardian may sell his ward’s personal estate without the intervention of a court (section 2031, Kentucky Stats., 19003), and apply the proceeds as well as the rents from his lands to his maintenance and education, when he can not be bound as an appren tice. One with whom he places the ward to board, and who furnishes clothing or other proper items of support, may maintain an action at law against the guardian to recover for the things so furnished. But, before a judgment will be rendered in such action, *it should be made to appear what estate the ward has, as upon that fact will largely depend the reasonableness of the charge — a fact which can not be substituted by the admission of the guardian and the judgment of a court of law upon it. The petition should have set out what estate the ward has, its kind and productiveness, the age and sex of the ward, so that the court might have seen whether the allegation was well founded that the application of the principal of *359the estate was required, in addition to its income to properly maintain and educate them.
This is not a suit to sell the ward’s real estate for any of the purposes named. Such a proceeding is regulated by Civil Code of Practice, section 489. While the parent is presumably hound to support his infant children without charge upon their estate, yet if the parent is poor, and the estate of the children more able to justly hear the expense of their maintenance and education, the parent may recover for supporting .them. Chapline v. Moore, 7 T. B. Mon. 150; Hughart v. Spratt, 78 Ky. 313; Hedges v. Hedges, 73 S. W. 1112, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 2220; Harper v. Payne, 73 S. W. 1123, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 2301.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.